Private property: Difference between revisions

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'''Private property''', not to be confused with [[individual property]] or [[personal property]], describes a labor relationship to the [[means of production]]. As a concept, private ownership of property can exist only in the specific context of a political system which defines how it exists and how it can be used.
'''Private property''', not to be confused with [[individual property]] or [[personal property]], describes a labor relationship to the [[means of production]]. As a concept, private ownership of property can exist only in the specific context of a political system which defines how it exists and how it can be used.


Under capitalism, a right to private property is not based on one’s own labor (as in one form of [[individual property]]) but appropriation of the products of the labor of others<ref>https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctt1w8h23p.19</ref>.
Under capitalism, a right to private property is not based on one’s own labor (as in one form of individual property) but appropriation of the products of the labor of others<ref>https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctt1w8h23p.19</ref>.


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 09:28, 24 November 2020

Private property, not to be confused with individual property or personal property, describes a labor relationship to the means of production. As a concept, private ownership of property can exist only in the specific context of a political system which defines how it exists and how it can be used.

Under capitalism, a right to private property is not based on one’s own labor (as in one form of individual property) but appropriation of the products of the labor of others[1].

References